Easy Buttonhole Tutorial

Now, I am very aware you can easily follow your sewing machine manual and teach yourself to do the same thing. But…if you are a visual learner. Well, then this tutorial is for you!

Buttonholes can seem daunting to a beginner sewist, but I promise they are a cinch. Especially with a Brother sewing machine.

Even the most of the lower priced machines come with an automatic buttonhole foot like this one:

Let’s walk through how to use it.

1. Mark where you want your buttonhole to go with a washable fabric marker or pencil. Don’t worry about getting the exact width of the button drawn out. The buttonhole foot will take care of that for you. Simply mark a line in the direction you want your buttonhole to go. Then draw a shorter dash perpendicular to the line to form a “T.”

2. Now take your buttonhole foot and open the part that expands and retracts. Place your button in the opening and pull it closed until the button fits snugly (but not too tight) into the opening.

3. Remove your regular sewing foot by pressing on the little lever/tab directly behind the presser foot. It should come right off. Then pop the buttonhole foot on by lowering the presser foot lever over the metal bar on the buttonhole foot. Lift it back up in preparation for adding your fabric.

4. Now set your settings to the desired buttonhole foot stitch.

5. Slide your marked fabric under the presser foot with the top of the “T” facing you.

6. Line that T up under the buttonhole foot. Make sure the top of the T lines up with the red and green markings and that the longer line is centered in the middle of the foot.

7. Lower your presser foot and lower your buttonhole guide located to the left of the presser foot. You should be able to simply pull it down. There is a bump on the buttonhole foot where this guide should hit just behind.

8. Now, let’s rock and roll. Simply press down the presser foot and let the buttonhole foot and your machine do all the work!

*If you run into snags: you run out of thread, the thread gets caught and breaks…simply take the fabric off the machine, unpick it and start again.

9. Aha! There you go. A perfect buttonhole.

10. Let’s open it up.

First, trim away all hanging threads.

Next, you can use a buttonhole cutter tool like this one. Or you can use the traditional method and put a pin at the end of the buttonhole (so you don’t rip through the threads) and use your seam ripper. Or… you can simple cut the opening with a pair of super sharp sewing scissors. This is my preferred method because it’s easy, clean and quick.

Take your time and be careful. You don’t want to cut through your buttonhole and ruin all your work, because it is almost impossible to go back and fix it once you cut it.

11. Leave it as is or add fray check to keep the buttonhole looking nice and clean (totally optional).

12. Place your nicely sewn and cut buttonholes over the fabric you want to button it to. Make a mark through the center of the buttonhole with a fabric marker or pencil.

This is where you are going to sew on your button.

You can hand sew it on or if your button is not a shank button you can machine sew it using THIS method from Ruffles & Stuff. If you do machine sew it on, I suggest leaving long thread tails that you can double knot before trimming.

Test drive your buttonhole and button and pat yourself on the back!

Note: If it feels snug at first, do NOT worry. It will stretch out after a few pass throughs. You don’t want the buttonhole too large because you don’t want it to sag over time or not hold your project in the right place. A little bit of snugness is good.

Awesome tutorial! Buttonholes always seem like they’ll be much harder than they actually are. I’ve got a post on Craft Gossip scheduled for this evening that links to your tutorial. When it goes live, you can find it here:

Nice tutorial! I have a Brother CS6000i and when I let the machine to do the actual sewing work, I unplug the pedal and push that arrow button on the machine (next to the backstitch) and the machine does the whole thing and stops when it's done. Kinda cool!

Heya just wanted to give you a brief heads up and let you know a few of the images aren’t loading properly.
I’m not sure why but I think its a linking issue.
I’ve tried it in two different web browsers and both show the same results.

Great question! I am sure there is a similar button holer feature on a Janome but I can’t speak to how to do that with authority since I don’t sew on one. Your best bet is to google bloggers who might have shared a Janome specific tutorial or to contact your Janome dealer. I hope that helps! I hear they are great machines!

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